Home » This Tiny Honda Truck Camper Is Smaller Than A Civic And Looks Nicer Than A Hotel Room

This Tiny Honda Truck Camper Is Smaller Than A Civic And Looks Nicer Than A Hotel Room

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Droves of Americans are getting in on the fun trend of buying and modifying Japanese Kei trucks. Sure, several states have banned these little guys from their roads, but enthusiasts can’t get enough. Perhaps the cutest of the bunch is this one, a 1990 Honda Acty. A YouTuber converted it into a surprisingly nice camper for its tiny footprint, and now it’s for sale.

This little camper first made the RV news rounds back in May when its creator, Levi Kelly, published a viral video giving viewers a tour of the camper. Levi calls this the “world’s smallest functioning camper,” and I have no idea if it’s true. But I don’t really care because he has me hooked. It seriously looks nicer inside than the last hotel room I’ve stayed in.

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Admittedly, an imported Honda Acty isn’t exactly something that you’re going to take on a long-distance trip. But if you’re looking for a little camper to take out into the backwoods or to more local state park campgrounds, I can see it working really well. Even cooler is how I recently spotted Levi’s build for sale, and his asking price is actually very reasonable. We’ll get to that in a little bit. First, let’s take a look at what he built:

 

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Levi Kelly might not be a well-known name amongst car enthusiasts, and that’s because his passion is unique homes. His channel, Levi Kelly Tours, has been around since 2013, and he loves touring gorgeous houses all over the world. He also has a website to help you find the unique vacation rentals he’s toured, which is neat.

Levi also has a second channel, Levi Kelly, and that one’s more personal, with the videos showing the silly things that he builds on his 14-acre property. Many of the videos on his second channel involve home improvement, but most recently, Levi has been getting into building absurdly micro-sized tiny houses and also kitting out imported Japanese vans and trucks into campers. So, if you’re into looking at beautiful homes, it sounds like Levi’s main channel will be up your alley. What drew me in was what he did to this Honda Acty.

On May 10, Levi published the video above about his camper and in it, Levi helpfully details how he built this camper. He says he started with a 1990 Honda Acty 4×4 that was imported from Japan.

A Tiny Camper On A Tiny Truck

Levicamper2
Levi Kelly

I’ve written about these little trucks a lot, but if you’ve missed those pieces, I’ll explain. The Acty is a member of the kei-jidōsha, Japan’s smallest class of highway-legal cars. When this truck was made, Kei regulations pegged the maximum length of a vehicle in the class at just 10.8 feet long. That makes this Honda Acty smaller than most highway-legal cars ever sold in America. In the modern day, only a Smart Fortwo comes in at a shorter length.

A 1990 Honda Acty is powered by a 656cc carbureted inline triple, good for a ravenous 34 HP. These trucks aren’t fast by any measure — cruising speed is about 55 mph — but they are reliable and will go as far as you’re willing to drive them.

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Levicamper3
Levi Kelly

What’s neat about the Acty is that it’s a descendant of Honda’s first production car, the T360. Yes, Honda is known for its motorcycles and reliable cars today, but its first production vehicle was a tiny truck! The Honda T360 launched in 1963. Back then, Japan’s Ministry of International Trade and Industry had proposed a plan to strengthen Japan’s auto sector by consolidating the industry into three groups. The perceived threat was that only automakers with something special to offer would be able to remain independent. Honda hit the ground running with an exceptional lineup of small cars and trucks.

The T360 series was replaced in 1977 by the Acty, and Levi’s is an early second-generation model.

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Levi Kelly

Levi specifies that his camper is the world’s smallest functioning camper. The term “functioning” matters to Levi because he’s noticed that a lot of people build Kei truck campers, but they’re little more than just a place to put a bed. Levi says that his camper can be lived in for a couple of days, such as a weekend trip. That’s because this camper has a shower, a toilet, a sink, running water, and even solar panels.

Levi says that he started by painting the Acty “military green” and contrasting the green with black wheels. Now, you can definitely tell that this is not a professional paint job. Levi did not paint inside of the cab at all, and there’s green overspray on parts. However, it does present well in photos and video.

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Levi Kelly

Levi says that the camper box was built over the course of a couple of weeks, and it’s constructed using 2x2s for framing. Levi notes that the truck has a carrying capacity of under 800 pounds, so he wanted to make sure that the Acty could carry the camper and a driver, and a passenger without being overweight.

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Levi continues by saying that foam insulation was used inside, and residential exterior wall paneling was used for the outer walls of the camper. Cedar was used as stylish trim, and reclaimed wood was used for interior paneling, plus maple for the countertop and walnut for interior trim.

Levicamper
Levi Kelly

 

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Levi Kelly

Attached to the side of the rig is a ladder, which gets you up to where the hinged solar panel is. The truck gets 100 watts of solar from this panel, which isn’t much, but this also isn’t a lot of camper. The panel charges a Pecron 288 Wh power station. This isn’t going to be enough juice to run an electric heater or even a flat iron for very long, but it should have no problem running lights, the fan, the water pump, and charging devices.

Inside, there’s just 21 square feet of living space, and Levi made the most of it. There’s a bench that converts into a bed, a sink with a decorative elephant-style faucet, and an electric pump hooked up to a 5-gallon drinking water jug. The sink drains into a 7-gallon gray tank under the sink. There isn’t an air-conditioner, but there are opening windows and a powerful side fan.

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Levi Kelly

Additional features include an electric hot plate, an absurdly tiny wood-burning stove for heat, and a shower head that connects to the sink and feeds outside. Finally, there’s also a portable toilet, and apparently, how you use it is that you pull it out of the storage box and sit on top of it under the skylight dome.

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Levi says that something neat about the camper is that it’s not permanently affixed to the truck. You can slide it off and use the camper by itself, or swap it into the bed of another Kei truck if you want to.

Beautiful And Priced Decently

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Levi Kelly

You get all of this for the sum of just $11,900 (link to listing), which seems like a decent price for a whole Kei truck and a really cute camper on the back to sleep in. Some dealerships try to charge more than $12,000 just for the Kei truck alone! The truck also has the equivalent of 29,935 miles on its odometer, so it should have plenty of life left.

I hope to see more of this in the future. I love the creativity put into making a tiny camper like this, and it’s even cooler that it’s about as functional as you can expect given the size.

Of course, I recommend checking the Kei truck laws in your state before you head out to Hillsboro, Ohio, to buy this. But if you’re lucky to live in a pro-Kei state, I think this could be a great ride. I’d love to spend a weekend in the little camper at a state park or something. Heck, it would be a great little rig to use on a Gambler 500. The possibilities are endless! Well, so long as you aren’t going to try driving it across the country, anyway.

(Topshot: Autopian/Levi Kelly)

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ADDvanced
ADDvanced
3 days ago

eh. I don’t get it.

  1. Thing is not capable of highway speeds, so unless you’re towing this somewhere to then offload it and use it, idk how adventurous you’re going to be with it unless you live right next to a national forest
  2. Black paint on an overlanding rig/skoolie/van anything you spend time in is silly; it turns into a convection oven.

It’s cute… but… yeah idk man. Doesn’t make any sense.

Comet_65cali
Comet_65cali
2 days ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

I always kind of think of it as an alternative to a Side-by-side.

This one needs a lift kit and some off road tires. IIRC these normally use the same bolt pattern as some ATVS (4×100).

JunkerDave
JunkerDave
2 days ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

It’s possible to drive somewhere without needing to go over 55. Of course it will take longer, but if you’re in a rush you should probably fly.

Shooting Brake
Shooting Brake
3 days ago

What a fun little build! I love it!

Weston
Weston
3 days ago

A non-street legal (at least not highway legal) vehicle with chicken coop on top that you can’t use because you can’t actually reach any destination using, what do you call them…. roads, that’s the word I’m looking for. But, asks real money, because he doesn’t want it anymore.
I’m thinking No.
It’s a doll house on wheels and will be confined to the backyard.

Rapgomi
Rapgomi
2 days ago
Reply to  Weston

I own a Kei Truck, its road legal in my state, and I use it for maybe 50% of my driving. I try to avoid interstates, but for secondary roads the 65mph top is fine. I have taken short interstate drives with it and had no real issues. I know Kei owners with oversized tires (raises top speed) that regularly take long freeway drives.

A camper like this could be fun and cool in the right place. It can go up narrow trails that would leave a modern fat SUV stuck, and would let you move around without the annoyance of setting up a camp site. Perfect for the remote area climbers and photographers.

It's Pronounced Porch-ah
It's Pronounced Porch-ah
3 days ago

Cool build, but not for me. I am just over 6ft tall, and don’t buy anything for camping that doesn’t have space for my Fiancée to come along. Has anyone else discovered DIY foamie campers? Basically rigid foam covered in fiberglass or poor mans fiberglass (cotton drop cloth and elmers), people manage to make some genuinely clever little campers/ slide-ins/ tear drops.

Steve Lee
Steve Lee
3 days ago

Zero chance I would choose to stay in that over ANY hotel.

JP15
JP15
3 days ago
Reply to  Steve Lee

If you saw bedbugs in a hotel room, you’d be racing to get in this thing. I’m not a camping type either, but there are absolutely cases where this is preferable to a hotel.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
3 days ago

Sees tiny camper, and Kei vehicle. Instantly knows who wrote the article.

Genuinely: this would be miserable for anyone taller than 5’6. Kei ‘beds’ aren’t near long enough for this.

Greg
Greg
3 days ago

Best thing about this is the paint job. You’d think he would have fixed that seat before doing the Guinness book photo shoot.

Anyways, the camper. These things I guess are fine if you have no other option and are a single person with no animals, but I would take almost any other option. On another note, we use one of those style porta-pottis at our “camp” site on our property and it has been fantastic. The girls love it, and its easy for me to clean without getting messy and needing gloves, 10/10.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
3 days ago

This has me very curious what your last “hotel” stay was in.

Because this is far closer to a small garden shed where lawnmowers are kept than the lovely place where my husband and I stayed in Puerto Vallarta just a couple weeks back where the shower alone was the size of that cabin (except we could stand upright) and the entire truck would have just fit on our corner balcony.

James
James
3 days ago

The shower is outside, the toilet is portable, only has an electric hot plate, bed is tiny, it seems like the only advantage this has over a used minivan is that people see your cute little camper and know you are camping.

Tallestdwarf
Tallestdwarf
3 days ago
Reply to  James

the only advantage this has over a used minivan is that people see your cute little camper and know you are camping.

…which, in many cases, is not an advantage.

Rapgomi
Rapgomi
2 days ago
Reply to  James

Kei trucks are like mountain goats. No normal used mini van can go the places something like this can go. They are also very durable. Its a specialized camper, but has its virtues.

And it is cute.

Slow Joe Crow
Slow Joe Crow
3 days ago

I think Romahome made more functional campers. They used a Bedford Rascal, which was the export version of the Suzuki Carry to build a Class C motorhome.
I’m not sure homebuilding techniques are the right way. I saw a Japanese guy on YouTube build a removable camper on a HiJet using honeycomb panels that was lighter and faster to build. His technique was more aerospace.

Phuzz
Phuzz
3 days ago
Reply to  Slow Joe Crow

I took a few pictures of one I saw on the street a while back:
https://i.imgur.com/xoKtKsJ.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/jmysrJg.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/EFsgOOX.jpg
(I love the sticker on the back)

Dead Elvis, Inc.
Dead Elvis, Inc.
1 day ago
Reply to  Phuzz

Again, someone doesn’t understand why painting a camper black is a terrible idea.

That still seems wildly preferable to the utter novelty item featured above.

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
3 days ago
Reply to  Slow Joe Crow

I was hoping to see a roof that hinged up like a VW camper van. Or a slide. Or something clever to give it more space.

Idle Sentiment
Idle Sentiment
3 days ago

“Nicer than a hotel room”?
I dunno… I’ve stayed in some pretty sketchy motel rooms. None of which required me to sleep with my head under the bathroom sink cabinet.

OrigamiSensei
OrigamiSensei
3 days ago
Reply to  Idle Sentiment

If you look at the picture of the sink you see the countertop has a cut so I presume that section over the bed lifts out for sleepytime.

Totally not a robot
Totally not a robot
3 days ago

I showed this kei-amper to my wife. She replied, “Don’t Acty so silly. We don’t need another car.”

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
3 days ago

I’d build one, but kei trucks are 100% illegal here [sad face]

Nick B.
Nick B.
3 days ago

Monique hates driving, but she loves camping. I wonder if she’d go for a pair of these…

Nick B.
Nick B.
3 days ago
Reply to  Nick B.

“I can get a 10 person tent for less!” So that’s a no, sadly. But expected.

Slow Joe Crow
Slow Joe Crow
3 days ago
Reply to  Nic Periton

I’ve seen similar builds on Ford Escort vans

Tallestdwarf
Tallestdwarf
3 days ago
Reply to  Nic Periton

I really like the avocado color, which was so prevalent when I was growing up. Every kitchen had this color in it. The lines on that Morris are really fantastic, too. In fact, the bodywork everywhere is great.

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
3 days ago

Better than a tent!

Chris D
Chris D
3 days ago
Reply to  CTSVmkeLS6

It’s quite clever, but he could stand up in a tent, and would not be able to stand up in this camper.
The “tiny house” concept is great, but not for those with even a little bit of claustrophobia.

Greg
Greg
3 days ago
Reply to  CTSVmkeLS6

Disagree.

Steve Lee
Steve Lee
3 days ago
Reply to  CTSVmkeLS6

No it is 100% not.

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
2 days ago
Reply to  Steve Lee

Yeah, good point I’m 6 foot two and would have to have my head out a hole in the wall!! Tent is better

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